Public Service Corp. v. De Grote

62 A. 65, 70 N.J. Eq. 454, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 36
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 19, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 62 A. 65 (Public Service Corp. v. De Grote) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Public Service Corp. v. De Grote, 62 A. 65, 70 N.J. Eq. 454, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 36 (N.J. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Stevenson, Y. C. (orally).

I take up the matter of latdng the pipes, or the attempt to lay pipes, in the village of Ridgefield Park. There are three separate motions now before this court to be determined. The first is a motion to modify a writ of injunction issued from this court by order of the chancellor, upon a bill filed by the Public Service Corporation of New Jersey and the Gas and Electric Company of Bergen County as complainants, against certain persons—six, I think—who were charged with interfering with the operation of the complainants in laying large gas mains within the limits of the municipality or village of Ridgefield Park. The injunction issued by the chancellor restrains these six natural persons from interfering with the deposit of these pipes along the streets in the village of Ridgefield Park, and the burying of them. The defendants the six natural persons embrace, as I recall the facts, three constables or police officers, or officers of that character connected with the municipality, a justice of the peace, and two members of the 'board of trustees of the village. These six persons had, in an official way, interfered with the encumbering of the streets with these pipes. The two members of the public board had, to a certain extent, instigated the acts that were complained of, which consisted of the arrest of the agents of the complainants who were laying these pipes by the three police officers, and the arraignment and holding to bail of these agents before the defendant, who was a justice of the peace of the county. The defendants, having filed their answer, have not moved for a dissolution of the injunction, but have moved for a modification of it, which is equivalent to an injunction upon the complainants restraining them from [456]*456laying these pipes pending the litigation to ascertain and determine the respective rights of the parties. The complainants thus have enjoined the defendants from interfering with their operations in laying these pipes. The defendants, upon filing their answer, practically move for an injunction in the cause restraining the complainants from laying their pipes—a somewhat peculiar legal situation.

The next proceeding before this court in relation to this matter is an application on the part of the complainants the Public Service Corporation and the Gas and Electric Company of Bergen County to punish three persons for contempt because of their alleged conduct in the way of obstructing the complainants in the enjoyment of their injunction. That perhaps is not an accurate statement of the exact nature of this proceeding,' as will appear further on, although perhaps it is the way in which the proceeding was conceived of by the originators of the movement to have these parties punished for contempt. The three parties are not defendants in the cause. The writ of injunction did not go against them either personally or by the use of any words which would include them within a class of people whom it was intended to reach and restrain. The application is made to punish these three outsiders because they did, or undertook to do, the very acts which interfered with the complainants’ operations in laying these pipes, which the defendants in the suit had done, or undertaken to do, and which the defendants in the suit were enjoined from doing. It is an unusual contempt proceeding in the State of New Jersey, and, so far as I know, without precedent.

The third proceeding before the court is upon an original bill filed by the village of Ridgefield Park, which for the first time by this bill comes into these contentions, and the object of the bill is to restrain the Public Service Corporation and the Gas and Electric Company of Bergen County, the complainants in the former bill, from laying certain pipes, which are described in the bill, within the corporate limits of the village.

The answer of the six defendants to the bill of the Public Service Corporation and the Gas and Electric Company of Ber[457]*457gen County takes two positions by way of defence: First. That the complainants have no right whatever to lay gas pipes in and under the streets of the village of Eidgefield Park without the written consent of the officials of the village, which consent is prescribed as a condition precedent to the opening of any street in the village by an ordinance adopted in 1893.

Secondly. That such right, namety, the right of the complainants to lay gas pipes in the streets of the village without obtaining the consent of the municipal authorities in writing, is confined to the laying and maintaining of pipes and mains which are reasonably necessary for the supply of gas within the corporate limits of this village, a small village of two thousand eight hundred inhabitants, and the answer sets up that as a matter of fact the complainants are not undertaking to lay pipes for the purpose which I have described, but are undertaking to lay immense iron pipes, of a diameter of twenty inches, for the purpose of transmitting gas through and under the streets of 'the village for use in other municipalities, where tire complainants are engaged in purveying gas. The position is taken by the answer that this is an additional burden upon tire streets; that the complainants have no franchise which permits them to lay or maintain such large pipes, altogether beyond' the necessities of the gas-supply to the municipality.

The bill filed by the village of Eidgefield Park—and it must be borne in mind that the two defences which I have described are set up by the six natural persons who are defendants to the suit of the Public Service Corporation and the Gas and Electric Company of Bergen County—sets up tire rights, of course, of the municipality, but the municipality is not a party to that first suit. The municipality, the village of Eidgefield Park, in its bill does not seem to take the extreme position which the six natural persons, the defendants, take against the former bill by way of defence. The village of Eidgefield Park asks for an injunction against the Public Service Corporation and the Gas and Electric Company of Bergen County to restrain them from laying these large twentj^-inch pipes because they are not being-laid for the purpose of carrying on any corporate business, for [458]*458accomplishing any of the corporate business of the two companies within the limits of the village, but are being laid for the purpose which 1 described a moment , ago, and because the defendants are thus endeavoring to impose an excessive and unlawful burden upon the streets of the municipality, and are without the protection of their franchises, an injunction is asked.

Now, these are the three matters to be determined. They were all argued together. All the affidavits which belong to each proceeding are by consent to be used in the other proceedings. I think at last we have definitely settled -what are the motion papers-—-what are the proofs which are to be considered in determining each one of these motions-—and I may say here, I understand that the act of 1861 incorporating the Hackensack GasLight Company and the act of 1864 incorporating the Bergen County Gas Light Company are also deemed before the court in evidence.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A. 65, 70 N.J. Eq. 454, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-service-corp-v-de-grote-njch-1905.